TRUE DISCIPLES
AND are
those who do not bear much fruit not disciples? They may be, but in a backward
and immature stage. Of those who bear much fruit, Christ says: "These are
My disciples, such as I would have them be—these are true disciples." Just
as we say of someone in whom the idea of manliness is realized: That is a man!
So our Lord tells who are disciples after His heart, worthy of the name: Those
who bear much fruit. We find this double sense of the word disciple in
the Gospel. Sometimes it is applied to all who accepted Christ's teaching. At
other times it includes only the inner circle of those who followed Christ
wholly, and gave themselves to His training for service. The difference has
existed throughout all ages. There have always been a smaller number of God's
people who have sought to serve Him with their whole heart, while the majority
have been content with a very small measure of the knowledge of His grace and
will.
And what is the difference between
this smaller inner circle and the many who do not seek admission to it? We find
it in the words: much fruit. With many Christians the thought of
personal safety, which at their first awakening was a legitimate one, remains
to the end the one aim of their religion. The idea of service and fruit is
always a secondary and very subordinate one. The honest longing for much fruit
does not trouble them. Souls that have heard the call to live wholly for their
Lord, to give their life for Him as He gave His for them, can never be
satisfied with this. Their cry is to bear as much fruit as they possibly can,
as much as their Lord ever can desire or give in them.
Bear much fruit: so shall ye be My
disciples—Let me beg every reader to consider
these words most seriously. Be not content with the thought of gradually doing
a little more or better work. In this way it may never come. Take the words, much
fruit, as the revelation of your heavenly Vine of what you must be, of what
you can be. Accept fully the impossibility, the utter folly of attempting it in
your strength. Let the words call you to look anew upon the Vine, an
undertaking to live out its heavenly fullness in you. Let them waken in you
once again the faith and the confession: "I am a branch of the true Vine;
I can bear much fruit to His glory, and the glory of the Father."
We need not judge others. But we see
in God's Word everywhere two classes of disciples. Let there be no hesitation
as to where we take our place. Let us ask Him to reveal to us how He ask and
claims a life wholly given up to Him, to be as full of His Spirit as He can
make us. Let our desire be nothing less than perfect cleansing, unbroken
abiding, closest communion, abundant fruitfulness—true branches of the true
Vine.
The world is perishing, the church
is failing, Christ's cause is suffering, Christ is grieving on account of the
lack of wholehearted Christians, bearing much fruit. Though you scarce see what
it implies or how it is to come, say to Him that you are His branch to bear
much fruit; that you are ready to be His disciple in His own meaning of the
word.
My disciples. Blessed Lord, much fruit is the proof that Thou the true
Vine hast in me a true branch, a disciple wholly at Thy disposal. Give me, I
pray Thee, the childlike consciousness that my fruit is pleasing to Thee, what
Thou countest much fruit.
The True
Vine. Andrew Murray